Get News Updates RSS RSS Feed
Get News Updates
Real Estate
Mortgage
Automotive
Employment
Services
Classifieds
Market Place
Media Kit
News
HOME
Front Page
Bulletin Board
Letters
Editorials
Obituaries
Schools
Sports
GMN Photo Page
Online Obituary Submission
Featured Special Section
Middlesex County South
Health & FItness Guide
About Us
Archive
Contact us
Services
Advertiser Index
Copyright©
2000 - 2008
GMN
All Rights Reserved
Terms of Use
Letters January 17, 2008
Search Archives


Stop smoking: More than a New Year's resolution
As with each New Year, many of us plan to read more, travel more, watch our weight and kick bad habits. For far too many people, that bad habit is smoking. And for the most part, while we allmean well, our NewYear's resolutions only last, at the most, until Groundhog Day.

The reality is, however, that giving up tobacco cannot be thought of as only a New Year's resolution.More than 160,000 deaths from lung cancer are expected nationwide this year, accounting for 29 percent of all cancer deaths.

It is the number one cause of cancer deaths for bothmen and women, and by the end of this day, 1,000 more children will begin smoking on a regular basis.

I am a medical oncologist who treats cancer patients at The Cancer Institute of New Jersey in New Brunswick and I am a board member of the American Cancer Society, Eastern Division. Inmy area of work, we see the death and destruction caused by tobacco use, including that of secondhand smoke on an ongoing basis. National statistics show there are between 5,000 and 10,000 cases of lung cancer diagnosed annually among those who never even smoked, most among women.

Given the severe health implications to us as individuals and to the nation, this topic should be on the minds of both smokers and nonsmokers every day of the year - not just on Jan. 1.

Dr. Mary B. Todd

Chief Operating Officer

The Cancer Institute of New Jersey

Professor of medicine, UMDNJ-Robert

Wood Johnson Medical School